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Effects of Nutrient Nonpoint Source Pollution on Seagrasses in Redfish Bay

Effects of Nutrient Nonpoint Source Pollution on Seagrasses in Redfish Bay. Kelly Darnell GISWR Fall 2009. Eutrophication. Increase in nutrient concentration Coastal eutrophication increasing Anthropogenic impacts: nutrient nonpoint source (NPS) pollution

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Effects of Nutrient Nonpoint Source Pollution on Seagrasses in Redfish Bay

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  1. Effects of Nutrient Nonpoint Source Pollution on Seagrassesin Redfish Bay Kelly Darnell GISWR Fall 2009

  2. Eutrophication • Increase in nutrient concentration • Coastal eutrophication increasing • Anthropogenic impacts: nutrient nonpoint source (NPS) pollution • Negative effects on coastal organisms, systems • Decreased light irradiance, hypoxia, anoxia, decreased water quality, stress species www.marietta.edu

  3. Seagrasses • Submerged marine plants • Ecosystem services • Sediment stabilization, particle settlement, food, habitat, nursery  proper ecosystem functioning • High light requirements make seagrasses sensitive to decreased water quality • Declining worldwide, TX • Anthropogenic impacts www.dep.state.fl.us www.unep-wcmc.org

  4. Seagrass Monitoring in Texas • Dunton et al. (2005) • Monitoring program for seagrass health indicators in Redfish Bay • Abiotic: water column nutrients, chlorophyll a, total suspended solids (TSS), sediment nutrients • Biotic: seagrass cover, biomass, morphology • Suggest input of nutrient NPS pollution • Water column nutrients

  5. Objectives • Obtain a visual representationof suggested nutrient NPS pollution in Redfish Bay • Better understanding of NPS pollution inputs • Cascading effects on seagrasses • Water column, sediment and seagrass nutrients, seagrass morphology • Dunton et al. (2005)

  6. Monitoring Sites: Redfish Bay, TX • 30 sites • 2002-2005 • Summer data Site 1 Site 30

  7. Phosphate (PO4): 2002-2005 • No clear trends

  8. Nitrate (NO3): 2002-2005 • No clear trends

  9. Phosphate and Nitrate: • Water column nutrients spatially and temporally variable • Suggested nutrient NPS input in 2002

  10. Water Column and Sediment Quality: 2002 • TSS and average porewater NH4higher in Northern part of Bay • TSS possibly detrimental to seagrasses • NH4 stimulate seagrass growth

  11. Seagrass Parameters: 2002 • Dominant seagrass • Turtlegrass leaf length and aboveground biomass slightly lower in Northern part of Bay • Seagrass may be stressed

  12. Conclusions So Far • Results support existence of nutrient NPS pollution in Redfish Bay • Results suggest seagrass may be negatively affectedby indicated NPS pollution

  13. Future Plans • Compare nutrient inputs to local precipitation • Obtain an indication of runoff • Visually represent: • Water column nutrient concentrations by site • Seagrass leaf nutrients by site and year • Seagrass above- and below-ground biomass by site and year

  14. Questions?

  15. Sources • Dunton KH, Kopecky AL, Maidment D (2005) Monitoring design criteria and biological indicators for seagrass conservation in Texas coastal waters. Final Report for Regional Environmental Monitoring and Assessment Program, EPA • Texas World Imagery Basemap obtained from ESRI (resources.esri.com)

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